7. Revisions and premières, 1927–54.
After years of health problems, eventually diagnosed as diabetes, Ives retired from business on 1 January 1930. His music was written, but its public career was just beginning. After Bellamann and Schmitz, Ives found an ever-increasing series of advocates who promoted and performed his music. Most important was Cowell, whose quarterly New Music printed several Ives works, starting with the second movement of the Fourth Symphony in 1929, and who wrote a series of appreciations of Ives’s music emphasizing its pioneering use of innovative techniques. Cowell’s New Music Society sponsored the première of the First Violin Sonata in San Francisco in 1928. Also at Cowell’s urging, Nicolas Slonimsky approached Ives for a piece for his Boston Chamber Orchestra, and Ives responded by rescoring Three Places in New England, which Slonimsky performed in New York, Boston, Havana and Paris in 1931 to generally favourable reviews. In September, Slonimsky conducted the première of Washington’s Birthday at a New Music Society concert in San Francisco, and the following year he conducted The Fourth of July in Paris, Berlin and Budapest. In May 1932 Hubert Linscott and Aaron Copland presented seven of Ives’s songs at the first Yaddo Festival of Contemporary American Music, and Ives began to be seen as a forerunner of the current generation of American modernists. These seven songs, The Fourth of July, and the Set for Theatre Orchestra were published in 1932, followed by more songs in 1933 and 1935, Three Places in New England in 1935, Washington’s Birthday in 1936 and Psalm 67 in 1939. Numerous songs were given premières in recitals during the 1930s in New York, San Francisco, Boston, Dresden, Vienna, Paris (with Messiaen at the piano) and elsewhere. The January 1939 New York première of the Concord Sonata by John Kirkpatrick (who had played the world première the previous November in Cos Cob, Connecticut) drew high praise from Gilman in the Herald Tribune, who called it ‘exceptionally great music … the greatest music composed by an American, and the most deeply and essentially American in impulse and implication’. More premières followed, including the Fourth Violin Sonata in 1940, the Symphony no.3 and the String Quartet no.2 in 1946, and the Piano Sonata no.1 in 1949, each more than a quarter of a century after its completion. Ives was elected to the National Institute of Arts and Letters in 1945, and the Symphony no.3 won the Pulitzer Prize in 1947. Bernstein conducted the New York PO in the première of the Symphony no.2 in 1951, over 40 years after its completion, and the Symphony no.1 was finally performed for the first time in 1953, half a century after it was finished.
Throughout this time, Ives continued to work on his music, copying the full score for Thanksgiving during a year in Europe with Harmony in 1932–3, recording his own piano performances and improvisations in London and New York, adding a new ending to the Second Symphony, and pulling old pieces out of his piles of manuscripts. He had photocopies made of his manuscripts and sent them to those who expressed interest in a work. In the early 1930s he dictated reminiscences about his life and his music, intended only to provide information for those writing about him, but published four decades later as Memos. Although in Essays before a Sonata he had seemed a follower of Beethoven, in Memos he emphasized his experimental works and his invention of novel techniques, presenting himself as the pioneer Cowell and others seemed to want him to be, and credited so much influence to his father that he obscured for decades his deep debts to Parker, to the 19th-century Romantic tradition, and to older contemporaries such as Debussy. He worked for years on a revised edition of the Concord Sonata, finally published in 1947. His health gradually weakened, and in May 1954 he died of a stroke while recovering from an operation.
Music continued to appear after his death, and his reputation continued to grow. Harmony Ives gave his manuscripts to the Library of the Yale School of Music in 1955, and John Kirkpatrick published a meticulous catalogue in 1960. The first biography, by Henry and Sidney Cowell in 1955, was followed by a steady stream of theses and articles. The Fourth Symphony was finally played in its entirety in 1965. Memos and other writings appeared in 1972. The Charles Ives Society, which became active in 1973, has sponsored a series of critical editions of individual works with Kirkpatrick and James B. Sinclair the most prominent editors. The 1974 centennial brought the first festivals devoted to Ives’s music, and there have been several since. Extensive interviews with those who knew Ives were published in an abridged form (Perlis, C1974), an extremely valuable resource. A second biography appeared during the centennial (Wooldridge, C1974), and a third (Rossiter, C1975) began a current of reconsidering the legends that had grown up around the composer. The first survey of his music (Hitchcock, D1977) provided a succinct overview of his entire output. Since the mid-1980s, studies have appeared that clarify our picture of Ives’s life, family, career, and psychology (Burkholder, C1985; Moore, C1985; Feder, C1992; Swafford, C1996); demonstrate his strong links to European composers (Gibbens, C1985; Hertz, D1993; Block and Burkholder, B1996); reveal his use of interval cycles, pitch class sets, and other organizing principles (Winters, D1986; Baron, D1987; Lambert, D1987 and D1997; Roller, E1995); trace the American experimental tradition that began with Ives (Nicholls, D1990); treat major works in depth (Meyer, E1991; Rathert, D1991; Block, E1996); describe Ives’s use of stylistic heterogeneity as a formal device (Starr, D1992); and examine his methods of musical borrowing (Burkholder, D1995). He is now regarded more highly for the beauty and power of his music than for his pioneering innovations, which is as it should be, and the meaning and structure of his music are more deeply and widely understood than ever before. His appeal to audiences worldwide continues to broaden, and his place among the leading composers of his time is secure.
See Borrowing, §12
Ives, Charles
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